Media
France looks to legalise P2P sharing
Published Friday, Dec 23 2005, 13:38 GMT | By James Welsh
Lawmakers in France's lower house of parliament have voted to legalise file-sharing over peer-to-peer networks provided users pay a flat royalty fee of around £5.
The measure was introduced as an amendment to a government-backed bill that would have tightened digital copyright laws. The 30-28 vote in favour of legalising P2P sharing of movies and music is being seen as a major setback for the French culture minister, Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres, who introduced legislation that would have levied heavy fines and prison terms on those caught pirating copyrighted material.
Organisations representing the French entertainment industry have united in opposition to the bill in an attempt to dissuade lawmakers in the upper house of the French legislature from approving the measure.
"This could be a catastrophe for French cinema, affecting present and future generations of creators and artists," said Alain Terzian, head of the French film producers' union UPF.
Consumer groups, however, were pleased with the vote. UFC, a large consumer group in France, said that the measure was a "new area of freedom allowing Internet users access to cultural diversity and fair payment for creators."
The measure was introduced as an amendment to a government-backed bill that would have tightened digital copyright laws. The 30-28 vote in favour of legalising P2P sharing of movies and music is being seen as a major setback for the French culture minister, Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres, who introduced legislation that would have levied heavy fines and prison terms on those caught pirating copyrighted material.
Organisations representing the French entertainment industry have united in opposition to the bill in an attempt to dissuade lawmakers in the upper house of the French legislature from approving the measure.
"This could be a catastrophe for French cinema, affecting present and future generations of creators and artists," said Alain Terzian, head of the French film producers' union UPF.
Consumer groups, however, were pleased with the vote. UFC, a large consumer group in France, said that the measure was a "new area of freedom allowing Internet users access to cultural diversity and fair payment for creators."
More: Media, Video on Demand
More Media News
Satellite TV News
Sky marks Jubilee with Union Jack remoteSky and One For All create universal remote celebrating the landmark UK summer.
Cable News
Pirate Bay blockade begins with VirginBT, Sky, others to follow suit, but rights groups warn it won't tackle piracy.
Freeview News
Freeview+ made easier for blind peopleRNIB develops software to make it easier for blind people to use Freeview+.
Video on Demand
'World first' social VOD service launchesThe studio behind Plan B's iLL Manors offers VOD users rewards for sharing.






